Droopy wrote:Fantastic, brazen disingenuity (and what is called "left-wing media bias). "Gridlock is precisely what the Founders foresaw as a major aspect of the functioning of the federal government, in a host of circumstances. Its only the Left that wants a vast, highly centralized, "active" government that spend most of its time making laws rather than governing.
The idea that there has been anything approaching "gridlock" over the past four years of essentially one-party rule shows utter disrespect for the intelligence of the author's readers.
MeDotOrg wrote:On the one hand you say "Gridlock is precisely what the Founders foresaw as a major aspect of the functioning of the federal government, in a host of circumstances".
But in the very next paragraph you say: "The idea that there has been anything approaching "gridlock" over the past four years of essentially one-party rule shows utter disrespect for the intelligence of the author's readers."
So gridlock is major aspect of a functioning government, but to suggest that it is occurring is to disrespect the readers. Could you please elaborate?
Droopy wrote:Do you have a severe reading comprehension problem? Where did I say that "gridlock is major aspect of a functioning government"? That was part of the theory of the Founders regarding good government - the wheels would grind very slowly - and the concept of checks and balances would turn each branch of government against the other so a certain degree by creating different incentives and "turf" for each.
That has been destroyed, for the most part, which was the point I was making (duh....).
Merriam-Webster reports the first usage of the word
gridlock in 1980, and given the Founding Father's limited time travel capabilities, I doubt it would be a word they would choose to describe any aspect of government.
But let us press on: Can you provide examples of your contention is that the concept of 'Gridlock' and 'checks and balances' ...'has been destroyed, for the most part'?
The Founding Fathers used the world filibuster little more than they used the word gridlock. Nevertheless, it is an inescapable and growing aspect of gridlock today.
Further, our Government spending is now determined by the process of sequestration, because Congress can't pass a budget. When Congress passes a budget that it knows will raise the deficit, it then refuses to cover its own check. The United States credit rating has suffered a hit, not because of the deficit, but because Congress refused to raise the deficit ceiling.
When the U.S. credit rating takes a hit and our Government operates under sequestration, I call that Gridlock, and no, I don't think its a healthy condition envisioned by the Founding Fathers.